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Exodus 5:16

Context
5:16 No straw is given to your servants, but we are told, 1  ‘Make bricks!’ Your servants are even 2  being beaten, but the fault 3  is with your people.”

Exodus 8:27

Context
8:27 We must go 4  on a three-day journey 5  into the desert and sacrifice 6  to the Lord our God, just as he is telling us.” 7 

Exodus 10:25

Context

10:25 But Moses said, “Will you also 8  provide us 9  with sacrifices and burnt offerings that we may present them 10  to the Lord our God?

Exodus 12:33

Context

12:33 The Egyptians were urging 11  the people on, in order to send them out of the land quickly, 12  for they were saying, “We are all dead!”

Exodus 19:8

Context
19:8 and all the people answered together, “All that the Lord has commanded we will do!” 13  So Moses brought the words of the people back to the Lord.

1 tn Heb “[they] are saying to us,” the line can be rendered as a passive since there is no expressed subject for the participle.

2 tn הִנֵּה (hinneh) draws attention to the action reflected in the passive participle מֻכִּים (mukkim): “look, your servants are being beaten.”

3 tn The word rendered “fault” is the basic OT verb for “sin” – וְחָטָאת (vÿkhatat). The problem is that it is pointed as a perfect tense, feminine singular verb. Some other form of the verb would be expected, or a noun. But the basic word-group means “to err, sin, miss the mark, way, goal.” The word in this context seems to indicate that the people of Pharaoh – the slave masters – have failed to provide the straw. Hence: “fault” or “they failed.” But, as indicated, the line has difficult grammar, for it would literally translate: “and you [fem.] sin your people.” Many commentators (so GKC 206 §74.g) wish to emend the text to read with the Greek and the Syriac, thus: “you sin against your own people” (meaning the Israelites are his loyal subjects).

4 tn The verb נֵלֵךְ (nelekh) is a Qal imperfect of the verb הָלַךְ (halakh). Here it should be given the modal nuance of obligation: “we must go.”

5 tn This clause is placed first in the sentence to stress the distance required. דֶּרֶךְ (derekh) is an adverbial accusative specifying how far they must go. It is in construct, so “three days” modifies it. It is a “journey of three days,” or, “a three day journey.”

6 tn The form is the perfect tense with a vav (ו) consecutive; it follows in the sequence: we must go…and then [must] sacrifice.”

7 tn The form is the imperfect tense. It could be future: “as he will tell us,” but it also could be the progressive imperfect if this is now what God is telling them to do: “as he is telling us.”

8 tn B. Jacob (Exodus, 287) shows that the intent of Moses in using גַּם (gam) is to make an emphatic rhetorical question. He cites other samples of the usage in Num 22:33; 1 Sam 17:36; 2 Sam 12:14, and others. The point is that if Pharaoh told them to go and serve Yahweh, they had to have animals to sacrifice. If Pharaoh was holding the animals back, he would have to make some provision.

9 tn Heb “give into our hand.”

10 tn The form here is וְעָשִּׂינוּ (vÿasinu), the Qal perfect with a vav (ו) consecutive – “and we will do.” But the verb means “do” in the sacrificial sense – prepare them, offer them. The verb form is to be subordinated here to form a purpose or result clause.

11 tn The verb used here (חָזַק, khazaq) is the same verb used for Pharaoh’s heart being hardened. It conveys the idea of their being resolved or insistent in this – they were not going to change.

12 tn The phrase uses two construct infinitives in a hendiadys, the first infinitive becoming the modifier.

13 tn The verb is an imperfect. The people are not being presumptuous in stating their compliance – there are several options open for the interpretation of this tense. It may be classified as having a desiderative nuance: “we are willing to do” or, “we will do.”



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